Horn ok please..
[Horn ok please is basically a combination of Horn Please and OK, which are found written on trucks very commonly, mostly in a way that one can read it as 'Horn OK Please', though it's not one term. Here it works in a way like a truck driver's identity.]

Amal Malik and Armaan Malik are sons of Daboo Malik, who is Anu Malik's brother. This is the first time they have composed/sung for a film. Daboo earlier composed for Salman's Tumko na Bhool Paayenge, along with Sajid-Wajid. And now Amal and Armaan are sharing a Salman movie with Sajid-Wajid.

Chharahara (छरहरा) is a Hindi word, an adjective, which means slim, shaped up, not fat or in bad shape. Chharahari is the feminine word for the same, which can also sound like Chhareri, or Chareri, as you could also spell that.

For dhoop, i.e. sunshine, though, the word is still unique, and this is the first time someone has used it. Interesting usage of the word there by Kausar Munir. Maybe you could compare it with crisp, in a way.

The master of words is here again. He keeps writing as such, but somehow for Vishal Bhardwaj's movies, it gets special. Though in the last year he's written only for Vishal's movies. Directed by him, or at least produced by him. Anyway, this was not about whose-movie-is-it. This is about the song, that I love, and probably you do too.

First off, yes, the song does remind you of Dil to Bachcha Hai ji, because of some clear similarities. The song is sung by Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, the words are utterly simple, though the meaning conveyed is deep, and most importantly, the music is quite minimalist.

The much awaited trailer of Highway is out and a song by Nooran sisters is there in the trailer itself. The song is quite difficult to get as they sing the Punjabi words quite fast, but here is what I could get, with a working translation. When the CDs come out, will make the corrections if required. Till then this should help enjoy the song.

A sweet preparation of betel leaf,
A length of Lahori (ladies') suits' cloth
The kitten hitting wood-planks,
[kitten is used for girl, hitting wood-planks is proverbial for having fun]
The firefly, jumping and meeting all,
She goes here and there in a moment..

The heart of Radhika is restless,
Mohan is there in Radha's heart,
The Mohan who's body is dark complexioned,
and whose eyes are both like seas of liqueur
The holder of rock, becoming the excursioner of forests,
the dark complexioned Krishna, plays his flute..
He's the flautist of Gokul,
on whose rhythm Radha dances
keeping on saying Giridhar, Giridhar..
Radha's Girdhar has come..
See, oh, the Girdhar of Radha has come,
See Radha, flute playing Girdhar has come..
See Radha..

Nami Daanam (Persian:نمی دانم) is a Persian (Farsi) language phrase which means 'I don't know.' In Persian, nami (نمی, not spoken as naami) is 'not', and daanam (دانم) is 'I'. And hence the meaning of the whole phrase comes out to be more than the sum of its parts - 'I don't know.'

The phrase is common and is used not only in Urdu but once in a while heard in Urdu-Punjabi filled Bollywood songs as well. It could be heard in Dhoom 3 song Kamli [meaning] as well.

There, a comment explains the meaning of the phrase Nami Daanam better. Here it is. Thanks Anonymous. Would have loved your name here.

Not quite right. 'Na' means no/not, 'mi' is the continuous tense marker, and 'daanam' mean 'I know,' coming from the infinitive form 'daanestan' (to know). 'Daanam' does not mean 'I,' rather it's the first person present conjugation of the verb. The full present tense conjugations are given below:

Ni main kamli kamli is a song of Dhoom 3, and the phrase means nothing but 'I've gone crazy, crazy.'

This seems to be the item number which could be compared to earlier crazy kiya re from Dhoom series. Getting crazy is part of Dhoom it seems, and this time they're doing it all in Punjabi, be it Malang [meaning] or kamli.

Hamri Atariya [meaning] pe aaja re Sanwariya. Vishal Bhardwaj composes, Gulzar writes the lyrics, Rekha Bharadwaj sings, and Madhuri Dixit dances to it. To top it, the song is based on an old thumri on raaga Sindhu Bhairavi. Now how could you not expect high from the song. But for me, despite the high expectations from it, the song still passes, and with quite flying colors. See if you like it too. The first song of Dedh Ishqiya [meaning].

I have tried my best to translate the song, but as may always be the case with Gulzar Saab's songs, there are so many nuances in the song that one might miss, so if there is anything that you think is missing, please let me know, and if I find something to add, I sure will. Thanks.

I sit adorned, as if in a punishment
[because the beloved is not coming]
I sit, having called him to my breaths,
where has the unknown gone?
I have kindled many lamps,
but the moth hasn't come to the balcony..
[a moth is expected to be attracted to lamps, and hence she kindles lamp.]

Ataari or Atari is used for an upper room or building on the roof of a house, that is, a penthouse. Also, the word can be used for an attic or a balcony.

In poetry, the word is mostly used for something which is open and can be reached in some way or the other without going inside the house, and also provides a view of the outside, and hence, the penthouse and balcony both meanings fit okay in the context.

Atariya is a more localized form of the word and is used to show a more rustic, local or old styled setting.